Women in the Navy
by
Jean Ebbert, Lieutenant Junior Grade, U.S. Navy, Retired
and Marie-Beth Hall
During the Vietnam war, nearly all Navy women played their usual
role: they took over the jobs of
Navy men in the United States, releasing
them to fight the war. Only a handful of Navy women other than
nurses—nine officers—actually
served in Vietnam, but related events at
home affected all Navy women.
The first woman to serve in Vietnam was Lieutenant Elizabeth G.
Wylie who reported to the staff of the
Commander of Naval Forces in Saigon in June 1967. She worked in the Command Information Center, which prepared
various kinds of reports, including briefings
to visiting journalists
and politicians. She spent three to six
days each month in the field gathering information
and taking pictures. "I’d go back if I
had the chance,” she later told a newspaper reporter. “The opportunity to see
the heart of the Navy at work is unique and rewarding.” She did
not want "to glorify what I did in
Vietnam. I never was under hostile fire or anything
like that."
Speaking of the women with whom she
shared quarters in Saigon she said, “The
only difficulties encountered were the same as the men. We
were all away from home, families,
and not in a particularly pleasant
situation.”
The second line officer to serve in Vietnam between 1968 and 1973 was Lieutenant
Susan F. Hamilton,
who in 1968 was assigned to the naval
staff in Saigon. Lieutenant Commander Barbara Bole and Lieutenant Sally Bostwick
later joined her. Lieutenants Mary Anderson and Ann Moriarty in
1971 reported to the Naval Support
Activity in Cam Ranh Bay. In 1972 Lieutenant
(junior grade) Kathleen Dugan reported
to Saigon; Commanders Carol Adsit and
Elizabeth Barrett also served there. No enlisted Navy women served in Vietnam.
Barrett was the highest ranking woman naval line officer to serve in
Vietnam, and the first to hold a command
in a combat zone. She arrived in Saigon in
January 1972, and in November became the
commanding officer of the 450 enlisted men
in the Naval Advisory Group, a position
she held until she left Vietnam in March 1973. She was forty
years old, had nineteen years of
naval service behind her, and knew that
some of the men in her command were “not
too pleased" to have a female commanding
officer. "It gave them something to talk about," she
said.
During her 15 months in Vietnam, she
had three days off: "February 2, 1972,
when I went sailing at Cat Lo, March 29 when I went swimming at
Vung Tau and December 19 when I wrote
Christmas cards.”
Far more Navy women volunteered to serve in Vietnam than went. The
women knew that if they were not allowed
to carry a share of the burden, then
the men would have to carry more. Lieutenant
Wylie wrote from Vietnam that “given the
adequate living facilities and outstanding
working atmosphere, I strongly believe that
the Navy women who desire to serve here
should have this opportunity."
Nevertheless, the Assistant Chief of Naval Personnel for Women still
did not think Vietnam duty was suitable for women, but she did agree to a policy that
allowed a woman officer to be
sent to Vietnam only if a Navy commanding
officer asked for her by name and stated that she was particularly qualified for a
certain job.
Meanwhile, in August 1972, Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Elmo Zumwalt
announced policy changes
for the assignment of women. One change was to initiate a pilot program under which a limited
number of officer and enlisted women
were assigned to the crew of the hospital
ship USS Sanctuary. On September 8, 1972, Personnel man
Third Class Peggy Sue Griffith reported
aboard USS Sanctuary, the first of a group
of 32 enlisted women and two women
officers setting off on uncharted seas.
The enlisted women were to work in the ship’s deck, supply, and
operations departments as well as in administration.
(In addition, 21 enlisted women worked in the ship’s hospital.) These women were now the U.S. Navy’s first
sea-going women sailors, expected to perform the same duties as their male shipmates.
Lieutenant (junior grade) Ann Kerr served primarily as an
administrative assistant, with
significant additional watch standing duties both in port and at sea.
Ensign Rosemary Nelson of the Supply
Corps was responsible for the officers’ wardroom mess (dining room) and also stood watches in port.
The women performed their duties competently, often exceptionally so. The
Sanctuary’s commanding officer concluded, after a year’s
experience with his mixed crew, “Women
are capable and may serve on board the Sanctuary, under the
present administrative conditions, in
perpetuity.” During the ship’s time with a mixed crew, she was underway at sea for several brief
training periods. She also sailed from
San Francisco to Buenaventura, Colombia,
then through the Panama Canal to Haiti, and finally to her new homeport of
Mayport, Florida. Compared with other Navy ships, this was
little time at sea, yet some women line
officers assigned to the ship earned their
qualifications as Officer of the Deck.
Not only could the ship handle women,
women could handle the ship. Women also
served on small Navy craft. As early as
the fall of 1972, 11 enlisted women reported straight out of
boot camp to the Annapolis Naval
Station for duty aboard the station’s
yard patrol craft used to train Naval Academy
midshipmen. From this modest beginning, the number of
women serving in small craft increased
steadily.
The Navy’s wartime decision to put women on board ships
— its distinctive operational platforms — started the women on a journey from the naval
profession’s periphery towards its heart.
The nine women line officers who served in
Vietnam had a significance far beyond
their tiny number. Like hundreds of women in the other
services, they made it impossible
to deny that women other than nurses could
serve in a combat zone. Their competence,
industry, and patriotism demonstrated
that Navy women were both ready and able to serve wherever they might be needed.
Remembrances
Compiled by Captain Georgia Clark
Sadler, U. S. Navy (Ret)
Nine women line officers served in Vietnam and brought back lasting,
vivid memories of their time in country. But women were also in jobs directly supporting
the war effort and some were on the other
“front lines” — college
campuses and the streets of Washington, D.C. Regardless of where they were or what they did, the Vietnam
conflict was an emotional experience for
all of these women.
I spent New Year’s eve 1968 at Red Beach, a Seabee camp outside of Da
Nang on the shores of Da Nang Bay. It was
a beautiful beach with miles of white sand —
right out of a resort poster
— only for as far as the eye could see, there
were coils and coils of barbed wire. The
Seabees had built a small club and we gathered there for happy
hour. I took my drink out onto the lanai
to enjoy the breeze and view, barbed wire not withstanding. Flashes of
light caught my eye from the nearby hills
— they were flashes of gunfire and you
could hear the echoing of the gunfire and
mortars. And as I stood there with my drink, I realized that there were people—human
beings—up on that hillside killing each
other and I was overwhelmed by the feeling of the incongruity of
it all. It is a memory I shall not soon
forget. (Carol A. Adsit, Da Nang 1968)
I was the personnel officer for about 260 enlisted personnel and 350 Vietnamese
civilians at the Navy’s air facility at
Cam Ranh Bay. Because the facility was closing, I spent most of
my time getting orders for my enlisted
troops and carrying out a reduction in force (RIF) of the civilians. Despite
being in the middle of a war, I had to
follow the same RIF procedures as were used in the United States.
Thus I found myself going to villages to
give laid off employees their severance pay. It was a sad duty. Some
Vietnamese said they were concerned for
their lives and asked me to help, but there was nothing I could do.
I sometimes wonder what happened to my Vietnamese
personnel officer. He probably ended up in a reeducation camp. Following U.S. RIF procedures was not the only incongruous thing I encountered.
I was not allowed to live in the Bachelor
Officer Quarters (BOQ) because it was considered inappropriate
for a woman to live in the same building
with men. Consequently, I lived on the other side of the base with the U.S. Air
Force nurses. The difficulty
was that I had to call Washington, D.C.
frequently to check on the orders for the enlisted personnel.
This meant driving outside the base at 3
am to get to the naval facility on the other side. On these trips I
constantly saw flares and heard bombs as
fighting went on nearby. Despite the danger, I was not allowed to carry
a weapon because I was considered a
non-combatant. It always struck me as strange that they were
more concerned about my living in the BOQ
than they were about my safety on these early morning trips near
the battlefield. There were also very
touching times. At Christmas I went with some Air Force
women to Army fire support bases where we talked to the soldiers and sang Christmas carols. The men
were young and lonely. It meant a lot to
them to be able to reminisce with someone from
their own country and who spoke their language. I also was part
of the air facility group that supported
a local Catholic orphanage with food and supplies. My skipper
adopted two boys from the orphanage and
because he left before all the paperwork was completed, I was the one
who put them on a helo and took them to
Saigon so they could go to America.
I am very happy I had the opportunity to go to Vietnam. My being there
meant that one less man had to go. It
also gave me the chance to do one of the most important jobs in the Navy —
take care of the troops.
(Mary Anderson Shupak; Cam Ranh Bay and Saigon, 1971-72)